Antihistamine‐resistant chronic spontaneous urticaria: 1‐year data from the AWARE study
Summary Background Previous reports indicate that patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) are undertreated and that physicians show poor adherence to guideline recommendations. Awareness of CSU has improved in recent years, but it remains unclear if this has improved the management of thes...
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Published in | Clinical and experimental allergy Vol. 49; no. 5; pp. 655 - 662 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
England
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
01.05.2019
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 0954-7894 1365-2222 1365-2222 |
DOI | 10.1111/cea.13309 |
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Abstract | Summary
Background
Previous reports indicate that patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) are undertreated and that physicians show poor adherence to guideline recommendations. Awareness of CSU has improved in recent years, but it remains unclear if this has improved the management of these patients in clinical practice.
Objective
To describe disease burden, quality of life (QoL), and treatment patterns of patients with H1‐antihistamine‐refractory CSU in Germany.
Method
A World‐wide Antihistamine‐Refractory chronic urticaria (CU) patient Evaluation (AWARE) is a global prospective, non‐interventional study of CU in the real‐world setting, supported by the manufacturer of omalizumab. Patients (18‐75 years) were included who had H1‐antihistamine‐refractory CSU for ≥2 months. Disease characteristics, pharmacological treatments, and QoL (dermatology life quality index [DLQI], CU‐QoL questionnaire, and angioedema QoL questionnaire) are reported for patients enrolled in Germany.
Results
After 1 year in AWARE, CSU remained uncontrolled (urticaria control test [UCT] score <12) in 432 of 1032 (42.2%) patients. QoL impairment remained high after 1 year, with 28.2% of patients reporting that CSU had a moderate/very large/extremely large effect on the DLQI. Most patients did not receive guideline‐recommended treatments at the end of the 1‐year observation period. Changes in treatments were most evident at the first patient visit, with an increase in patients receiving omalizumab vs prior therapy from 8.5% to 21.4%, and a decrease in those receiving no treatment from 29.9% to 12.8%. These changes were associated with reduced hives, angioedema, UCT scores, and QoL scores at Month 3, but only modest improvements thereafter. Of 528 patients with uncontrolled CSU and who were eligible for treatment escalation, only 3% received up‐dosing of H1‐antihistamines and only 5% were initiated on omalizumab during 1 year of treatment.
Conclusions & Clinical Relevance
This study highlights a significant discrepancy between recommendations for managing CSU in international guidelines, and in real‐world clinical practice in Germany. |
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AbstractList | Previous reports indicate that patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) are undertreated and that physicians show poor adherence to guideline recommendations. Awareness of CSU has improved in recent years, but it remains unclear if this has improved the management of these patients in clinical practice.
To describe disease burden, quality of life (QoL), and treatment patterns of patients with H
-antihistamine-refractory CSU in Germany.
A World-wide Antihistamine-Refractory chronic urticaria (CU) patient Evaluation (AWARE) is a global prospective, non-interventional study of CU in the real-world setting, supported by the manufacturer of omalizumab. Patients (18-75 years) were included who had H
-antihistamine-refractory CSU for ≥2 months. Disease characteristics, pharmacological treatments, and QoL (dermatology life quality index [DLQI], CU-QoL questionnaire, and angioedema QoL questionnaire) are reported for patients enrolled in Germany.
After 1 year in AWARE, CSU remained uncontrolled (urticaria control test [UCT] score <12) in 432 of 1032 (42.2%) patients. QoL impairment remained high after 1 year, with 28.2% of patients reporting that CSU had a moderate/very large/extremely large effect on the DLQI. Most patients did not receive guideline-recommended treatments at the end of the 1-year observation period. Changes in treatments were most evident at the first patient visit, with an increase in patients receiving omalizumab vs prior therapy from 8.5% to 21.4%, and a decrease in those receiving no treatment from 29.9% to 12.8%. These changes were associated with reduced hives, angioedema, UCT scores, and QoL scores at Month 3, but only modest improvements thereafter. Of 528 patients with uncontrolled CSU and who were eligible for treatment escalation, only 3% received up-dosing of H
-antihistamines and only 5% were initiated on omalizumab during 1 year of treatment.
This study highlights a significant discrepancy between recommendations for managing CSU in international guidelines, and in real-world clinical practice in Germany. BackgroundPrevious reports indicate that patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) are undertreated and that physicians show poor adherence to guideline recommendations. Awareness of CSU has improved in recent years, but it remains unclear if this has improved the management of these patients in clinical practice.ObjectiveTo describe disease burden, quality of life (QoL), and treatment patterns of patients with H1‐antihistamine‐refractory CSU in Germany.MethodA World‐wide Antihistamine‐Refractory chronic urticaria (CU) patient Evaluation (AWARE) is a global prospective, non‐interventional study of CU in the real‐world setting, supported by the manufacturer of omalizumab. Patients (18‐75 years) were included who had H1‐antihistamine‐refractory CSU for ≥2 months. Disease characteristics, pharmacological treatments, and QoL (dermatology life quality index [DLQI], CU‐QoL questionnaire, and angioedema QoL questionnaire) are reported for patients enrolled in Germany.ResultsAfter 1 year in AWARE, CSU remained uncontrolled (urticaria control test [UCT] score <12) in 432 of 1032 (42.2%) patients. QoL impairment remained high after 1 year, with 28.2% of patients reporting that CSU had a moderate/very large/extremely large effect on the DLQI. Most patients did not receive guideline‐recommended treatments at the end of the 1‐year observation period. Changes in treatments were most evident at the first patient visit, with an increase in patients receiving omalizumab vs prior therapy from 8.5% to 21.4%, and a decrease in those receiving no treatment from 29.9% to 12.8%. These changes were associated with reduced hives, angioedema, UCT scores, and QoL scores at Month 3, but only modest improvements thereafter. Of 528 patients with uncontrolled CSU and who were eligible for treatment escalation, only 3% received up‐dosing of H1‐antihistamines and only 5% were initiated on omalizumab during 1 year of treatment.Conclusions & Clinical RelevanceThis study highlights a significant discrepancy between recommendations for managing CSU in international guidelines, and in real‐world clinical practice in Germany. Previous reports indicate that patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) are undertreated and that physicians show poor adherence to guideline recommendations. Awareness of CSU has improved in recent years, but it remains unclear if this has improved the management of these patients in clinical practice.BACKGROUNDPrevious reports indicate that patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) are undertreated and that physicians show poor adherence to guideline recommendations. Awareness of CSU has improved in recent years, but it remains unclear if this has improved the management of these patients in clinical practice.To describe disease burden, quality of life (QoL), and treatment patterns of patients with H1 -antihistamine-refractory CSU in Germany.OBJECTIVETo describe disease burden, quality of life (QoL), and treatment patterns of patients with H1 -antihistamine-refractory CSU in Germany.A World-wide Antihistamine-Refractory chronic urticaria (CU) patient Evaluation (AWARE) is a global prospective, non-interventional study of CU in the real-world setting, supported by the manufacturer of omalizumab. Patients (18-75 years) were included who had H1 -antihistamine-refractory CSU for ≥2 months. Disease characteristics, pharmacological treatments, and QoL (dermatology life quality index [DLQI], CU-QoL questionnaire, and angioedema QoL questionnaire) are reported for patients enrolled in Germany.METHODA World-wide Antihistamine-Refractory chronic urticaria (CU) patient Evaluation (AWARE) is a global prospective, non-interventional study of CU in the real-world setting, supported by the manufacturer of omalizumab. Patients (18-75 years) were included who had H1 -antihistamine-refractory CSU for ≥2 months. Disease characteristics, pharmacological treatments, and QoL (dermatology life quality index [DLQI], CU-QoL questionnaire, and angioedema QoL questionnaire) are reported for patients enrolled in Germany.After 1 year in AWARE, CSU remained uncontrolled (urticaria control test [UCT] score <12) in 432 of 1032 (42.2%) patients. QoL impairment remained high after 1 year, with 28.2% of patients reporting that CSU had a moderate/very large/extremely large effect on the DLQI. Most patients did not receive guideline-recommended treatments at the end of the 1-year observation period. Changes in treatments were most evident at the first patient visit, with an increase in patients receiving omalizumab vs prior therapy from 8.5% to 21.4%, and a decrease in those receiving no treatment from 29.9% to 12.8%. These changes were associated with reduced hives, angioedema, UCT scores, and QoL scores at Month 3, but only modest improvements thereafter. Of 528 patients with uncontrolled CSU and who were eligible for treatment escalation, only 3% received up-dosing of H1 -antihistamines and only 5% were initiated on omalizumab during 1 year of treatment.RESULTSAfter 1 year in AWARE, CSU remained uncontrolled (urticaria control test [UCT] score <12) in 432 of 1032 (42.2%) patients. QoL impairment remained high after 1 year, with 28.2% of patients reporting that CSU had a moderate/very large/extremely large effect on the DLQI. Most patients did not receive guideline-recommended treatments at the end of the 1-year observation period. Changes in treatments were most evident at the first patient visit, with an increase in patients receiving omalizumab vs prior therapy from 8.5% to 21.4%, and a decrease in those receiving no treatment from 29.9% to 12.8%. These changes were associated with reduced hives, angioedema, UCT scores, and QoL scores at Month 3, but only modest improvements thereafter. Of 528 patients with uncontrolled CSU and who were eligible for treatment escalation, only 3% received up-dosing of H1 -antihistamines and only 5% were initiated on omalizumab during 1 year of treatment.This study highlights a significant discrepancy between recommendations for managing CSU in international guidelines, and in real-world clinical practice in Germany.CONCLUSIONS & CLINICAL RELEVANCEThis study highlights a significant discrepancy between recommendations for managing CSU in international guidelines, and in real-world clinical practice in Germany. Summary Background Previous reports indicate that patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) are undertreated and that physicians show poor adherence to guideline recommendations. Awareness of CSU has improved in recent years, but it remains unclear if this has improved the management of these patients in clinical practice. Objective To describe disease burden, quality of life (QoL), and treatment patterns of patients with H1‐antihistamine‐refractory CSU in Germany. Method A World‐wide Antihistamine‐Refractory chronic urticaria (CU) patient Evaluation (AWARE) is a global prospective, non‐interventional study of CU in the real‐world setting, supported by the manufacturer of omalizumab. Patients (18‐75 years) were included who had H1‐antihistamine‐refractory CSU for ≥2 months. Disease characteristics, pharmacological treatments, and QoL (dermatology life quality index [DLQI], CU‐QoL questionnaire, and angioedema QoL questionnaire) are reported for patients enrolled in Germany. Results After 1 year in AWARE, CSU remained uncontrolled (urticaria control test [UCT] score <12) in 432 of 1032 (42.2%) patients. QoL impairment remained high after 1 year, with 28.2% of patients reporting that CSU had a moderate/very large/extremely large effect on the DLQI. Most patients did not receive guideline‐recommended treatments at the end of the 1‐year observation period. Changes in treatments were most evident at the first patient visit, with an increase in patients receiving omalizumab vs prior therapy from 8.5% to 21.4%, and a decrease in those receiving no treatment from 29.9% to 12.8%. These changes were associated with reduced hives, angioedema, UCT scores, and QoL scores at Month 3, but only modest improvements thereafter. Of 528 patients with uncontrolled CSU and who were eligible for treatment escalation, only 3% received up‐dosing of H1‐antihistamines and only 5% were initiated on omalizumab during 1 year of treatment. Conclusions & Clinical Relevance This study highlights a significant discrepancy between recommendations for managing CSU in international guidelines, and in real‐world clinical practice in Germany. |
Author | Hillen, Uwe Baeumer, Daniel Reinhardt, Maximilian Maurer, Marcus Chapman‐Rothe, Nadine Oppel, Eva M. Richter‐Huhn, Grit Raap, Ulrike Bauer, Andrea Staubach, Petra |
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BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30415478$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
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Previous reports indicate that patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) are undertreated and that physicians show poor adherence to... Previous reports indicate that patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) are undertreated and that physicians show poor adherence to guideline... BackgroundPrevious reports indicate that patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) are undertreated and that physicians show poor adherence to... |
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SubjectTerms | Adult Angioedema Antihistamines chronic spontaneous urticaria Chronic Urticaria - drug therapy Clinical medicine Dermatitis Drug Resistance - drug effects Drug therapy Edema Female Follow-Up Studies Histamine Histamine H1 Antagonists - administration & dosage Humans Immunoglobulin E Male Middle Aged Monoclonal antibodies Omalizumab - administration & dosage Patients Quality of Life Questionnaires Urticaria |
Title | Antihistamine‐resistant chronic spontaneous urticaria: 1‐year data from the AWARE study |
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